stackage-curator

This repository contains the code for curating Stackage package sets and
building reusable package databases. It was originally simply called the
stackage package and was part of the stackage repository, but since this is a
tool very few people need to use, we split it into its own package with a name
to indicate it's limited usage (curators only).

Code explanation

We start off with constraints. Constraints state things like "package X has a
given version range," who the maintainer is for a package, the description of
the system/compiler being used, etc. BuildConstraints describes the build as
a whole, whereas PackageConstraints describes the constraints on an
individual package.

There are two primary ways of getting a BuildConstraints.
defaultBuildConstraints inspects the first GHC in the PATH environment variable to
determine GHC version, core packages, core tools, etc. It then uses the
Stackage.Config module to extract information on additional packages to be
installed. The secondary approach is in Stackage2.UpdateBuildPlan, which will be
discussed later.

BuildConstraints does not specify a build completely. That is given by a
BuildPlan, which is similarly broken down into BuildPlan and PackagePlan.
In order to get a BuildPlan, we need two pieces of information: the
BuildConstraints, and a package index. The package index (usually downloaded
from Hackage) is a collection of all of the cabal files available.

By applying a BuildConstraints to a package index (via newBuildPlan), we
get a proposed BuildPlan. There is no guarantee that this BuildPlan is
valid. To validate it, we use checkBuildPlan. A BuildPlan is an instance of
both ToJSON and FromJSON, and therefore can be serialized to a file for
later use.

When dealing with LTS Haskell, we want to be able to take a BuildPlan, and
update to a newer BuildPlan that keeps all packages at the same major
version. updateBuildConstraints turns a BuildPlan into a new
BuildConstraints with that restriction, and updateBuildPlan applies
newBuildPlan to that result. As mentioned previously: this is not a
validated result, and therefore checkBuildPlan must be used.

A BuildPlan can be acted on. This is done to check that all packages compile
together, run relevant test suites, test Haddock documentation is correct, and
produce as artifacts both a self-contained GHC binary package database and a
set of Haddock documentation. (Not yet implemented.)

A BuildPlan may be converted into a bundle to be uploaded to Stackage Server.
(Not yet implemented.)

0.3.1

0.3.0.1

0.3.0.0

0.2.1.4

Generate a core file in bundles.

0.2.1.1

Run postBuild earlier to avoid problems from broken doc uploads.

0.2.1.0

Use TLS manager (to download from Github)

0.2.0.0

Minor fixes

pbGlobalInstall

0.1.0.0

First version of Stackage which is made available as its own package. The
codebase has been completely rewritten at this point, to be ready for generated
both Stackage Nightly and LTS Haskell distributions.